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  2. Wikipedia : Featured picture candidates/Warship diagram

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Warship_diagram

    Edit The original, showing faded paper in color. Articles: Warship, Naval warfare. Another great find from the 1728 Cyclopaedia. It's like an anatomy chart for 18th century warships. The image could probably handle a little more cleanup, but as it stands, it's a highly detailed and informative diagram. Nominate and support.

  3. Rating system of the Royal Navy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rating_system_of_the_Royal...

    A 1728 diagram illustrating a first- and a third-rate ship. The rating system of the Royal Navy and its predecessors was used by the Royal Navy between the beginning of the 17th century and the middle of the 19th century to categorise sailing warships, initially classing them according to their assigned complement of men, and later according to the number of their carriage-mounted guns.

  4. Head (watercraft) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Head_(watercraft)

    The plans of 18th-century naval ships do not reveal the construction of toilet facilities when the ships were first built. The Journal of Aaron Thomas aboard HMS Lapwing in the Caribbean Sea in the 1790s records that a canvas tube was attached, presumably by the ship's sailmaker, to a superstructure beside the bowsprit near the figurehead ...

  5. List of corvette and sloop classes of the Royal Navy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_corvette_and_sloop...

    In the mid 18th-century, the definition was formally established based on ship size, armament, and crew size. [ 1 ] With the advent of steam assisted and steam powered vessels, the term "Sixth-rate" was replaced by "Sloop" as an official type of ship in the Royal Navy.

  6. Ship of the line - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ship_of_the_line

    In the 17th century fleets could consist of almost a hundred ships of various sizes, but by the middle of the 18th century, ship-of-the-line design had settled on a few standard types: older two-deckers (i.e., with two complete decks of guns firing through side ports) of 50 guns (which were too weak for the battle line but could be used to ...

  7. Seventy-four (ship) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seventy-four_(ship)

    Tsar Constatine-class ship of the line (4 ships) Yaroslav-class ship of the line (19) Svyatoy Petr-class ship of the line (7) Selafail-class ship of the line (23) Anapa-class ship of the line (11) Three Saints-class ship of the line (7) Ezekiel-class ship of the line (25) [5] Venetian 74-gun ship Vittoria in the Arsenal of Venice. Detail from a ...

  8. Third-rate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Third-rate

    A model of a third-rate ship of the line of the Navy of the Order of Saint John from the late 18th century. In the rating system of the Royal Navy , a third rate was a ship of the line which from the 1720s mounted between 64 and 80 guns, typically built with two gun decks (thus the related term two-decker ).

  9. Hoy (boat) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoy_(boat)

    Over time the hoy evolved in terms of its design and use. In the fifteenth century a hoy might be a small spritsail-rigged warship like a cromster. Like the earlier forms of the French chaloupe, it could be a heavy and unseaworthy harbour boat or a small coastal sailing vessel (latterly, the chaloupe was a pulling cutter – nowadays motorized).